Markie Post, Best Known for Night Court, Dies at 70

The veteran actress had been battling cancer for years
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Aug 8, 2021 5:10 PM CDT
Markie Post, Best Known for Night Court , Dies at 70
Actress Markie Post arrives at the Spike TV Guys Choice award show in 2008. Markie Post, who played the public defender in the 1980s sitcom “Night Court” and was a regular presence on television for four decades, has died. She was 70.   (AP Photo/Gus Ruelas, file)

Markie Post, who played the public defender in the 1980s sitcom Night Court and was a regular presence on television for four decades, has died, per the AP. She was 70. Post's manager, Ellen Lubin Sanitsky, said Post died Saturday in Los Angeles after a years-long battle with cancer. Post was a longtime television regular who appeared in shows from Cheers to Scrubs. But she was best known for her seven-season run on NBC's Night Court, the Manhattan municipal court sitcom that ran from 1984 to 1992 and starred Harry Anderson as Judge Harry T. Stone. Post became a full-time cast member of Night Court in season three as Christine Sullivan, a sincere and strong-willed woman who served as a constant foil to Dan Fielding, John Larroquette's womanizing, narcissistic prosecutor.

With comic rebuttal, Post's Christine deflected Fielding's lechery throughout the series' run. Several of Post’s Night Court co-stars have died in recent years. Harry Anderson died at age 65 in 2018. In July, Charles Robinson, who played the clerk Mac died at 75. NBC is currently developing a sequel to the series. Post had two daughters with her second husband, TV producer and writer Michael A. Ross. In a statement, the family said "our pride is in who she was in addition to acting; a person who made elaborate cakes for friends, sewed curtains for first apartments and showed us how to be kind, loving and forgiving in an often harsh world.” Post started in television behind the camera, working on the production crew of the game shows Double Dare and Card Sharks. Her first series regular role was in the Lee Majors action-adventure series The Fall Guy.

(More obituary stories.)

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